Following is a list of notable people from Nuremberg in Bavaria, Germany.Leonhard Mahlein
Academia
Presidents and directors
- Ottmar Hörl (born 1950), an artist who was president and professor at the Academy of Fine Arts, Nuremberg
 - August von Kreling (1818–1876), sculptor, painter, and director of the Academy of Fine Arts, Nuremberg
 - Johann Daniel Preissler (1666–1737), painter and director of Nuremberg's Academy of Fine Arts
 - Jacob von Sandrart (1630–1708), portrait and map engraver who founded and was and first director of the Nuremberg Academy of Fine Arts
 

Ludwig Andreas Feuerbach
Professors
- Heinz Bauer (1925–2002), mathematician and professor at the University of Erlangen-Nuremberg
 - Johann Bauschinger (1834–1893), professor of Engineering Mechanics at Munich Polytechnic
 - Hermann Beckh (1875–1937), pioneering Tibetologist and prominent promoter of anthroposophy.
 - Hermann Bek-Gran, (1869–1909), painter, graphic artist, typographer, and professor of the Academy of Fine Arts, Nuremberg
 - Wolfgang Bibel (born 1938) professor emeritus at the Department of Computer Science of the Technische Universität Darmstadt
 - Gustav Bischof (1792-1870), geologist, chemist, and professor at the University of Bonn
 - Ingo Böbel (1947–2020), professor of economics at the International University of Monaco from 2000 to 2020
 - Johann Cochlaeus (1479–1552), humanist, music theorist, and dean of the Liebfrauenkirche at Frankfurt
 - William Craig (1918–2016), philosopher who taught at the University of California, Berkeley
 - Johann Gabriel Doppelmayr (1677–1750), astronomer, mathematician, and professor of mathematics at the Aegidien-Gymnasium
 - Christian Enzensberger (1931–2009), professor of English studies, author and a translator of English literature into German
 - Dieter Fensel (born 1960), professor at the University of Innsbruck and director of the Semantic Technologies Institute Innsbruck
 - Ludwig Andreas Feuerbach (1804–1872), anthropologist and philosopher, best known for his book The Essence of Christianity[1]
 - Manfred M. Fischer (born 1947), regional scientist and emeritus professor of economic geography at the WU-Vienna University of Economics and Business
 - Wilhelm Geiger (1856–1943), Orientalist in the fields of Indo-Iranian languages and the history of Iran and Sri Lanka
 - Heinz Gollwitzer (1917–1999) chair of modern political and social history at the University of Münster
 - Heinrich Guggenheimer (1924–2021), mathematician and professor of University of Minnesota
 - Paula Hahn-Weinheimer (1917-2002), geochemist and professor at the Technical University of Munich
 - Lisa Herzog (born 1983), professor at the Center for Philosophy, Politics and Economics at the University of Groningen
 - Rudolf Hickel (born 1942), chair of public finance at University of Bremen
 - Wolfgang Kaiser (1925–2023), professor for experimental physics at the Technische Universität München
 - Uwe Kitzinger (1928–2023), an academic who specialized in international relations
 - Wolfgang Koch, (born 1962), physicist and computer scientist who teaches at the University of Bonn
 - Gerhard Koeppel (1936 –2012), historian of Roman art, resident scholar at the American Academy in Rome, and professor of classics at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
 - Hermann Leuchs (1879–1945), head of the chemistry institute of the University of Berlin
 - Paul Carl Leygebe (1664–1756), painter and anatomy professor at the Prussian Academy of Arts
 - Hans Eberhard Mayer (1932–2023), professor of medieval and modern history at the University of Kiel
 - Anthony Oettinger (1929–2022), computer scientist who co-founded the Program on Information Resources Policy at Harvard University.
 - Johan Martin Preisler (1715 –1794) engraver and professor at the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts
 - Volker Roemheld (1941–2013), agricultural scientist, plant physiologist, and soil biologist at Hohenheim University
 - Manfred Rühl (born 1933), professor of communications at University of Erlangen–Nuremberg and the University of Bamberg
 - Gerard Salton (1927–1995), professor of Computer Science at Cornell University and "the father of Information Retrieval"
 - Diet Sayler (born 1939), painter, sculptor, and professor of painting at the Academy of Fine Arts, Nuremberg
 - Christoph von Scheurl (1481–1542), professor of law at Wittenberg University
 - Matthias Schwab (born 1963), chair of clinical pharmacology at the University of Tübingen and medical director of the Department of Clinical Pharmacology at the University Hospital Tübingen
 - Daniel Schwenter (1585–1636), professor of oriental languages and mathematics at the University of Altdorf
 - Peter Seeberger (born 1966), professor of chemistry at Massachusetts Institute of Technology and at ETH Zurich
 - Johann Philipp Siebenkees (1759–1796), philosopher and professor at the University of Altdorf
 - Hartmut Steinecke (1940–2020), professor of Modern German Literature at the University of Bonn
 - Alexander Strehl, computer scientist and professor at the University of Aalen
 - Karl Süssheim (1878–1947), Islamic historian and professor at the University of Munich
 - Conrad Tockler (1470–1530), rector magnificus and professor of the quadrivium at Leipzig University
 - Heiko Uecker (1939–2019), professor of Nordic Philology at the University of Bonn
 - Johann Christoph Wagenseil (1633–1705), chair of ecclesiastical law and professor of history, civil law, and Oriental languages at the University of Altdorf
 - Isabella Weber (born 1987), economist and an assistant professor of economics at the University of Massachusetts Amherst
 
Architecture
- Heinrich Beheim (died 1403), stone mason and architect
 - German Bestelmeyer (1874–1942), architect and proponent of Nazi architecture
 - Georg Andreas Böckler (c. 1617–1687), architect and engineer who wrote Architectura Curiosa Nova (1664) and Theatrum Machinarum Novum (1661)
 - Paul Buchner (1531–1607), architect, geometer, carpenter and screw maker
 - Eva Buhrich (1915–1976), architect and writer who fled Nazi Germany and became a prominent architectural commentator in Australia
 - Adolf Foehr (1880 –1943) architect, city planner, and building supervisor.
 - Herta Hammerbacher (1900–1985), landscape architect who taught at the Technical University of Berlin
 - Adam Kraft (c. 1460–1509), stone sculptor, master builder and architect[2]
 - Paul Pfann (1860–1919), architect in the Historicist style and professor at the Technical University of Munich
 - Hubert Ritter (1886–1967) architect, urban planner and building official
 - Paul Ritter (1829 –1907), architectural painter and etcher
 - Sep Ruf (1908–1982), architect and designer associated with the Bauhaus group
 

Albrecht Dürer

Adam Kraft
Art
- Caroline Achaintre (1969), mixed media artist
 - Bernhard Afinger (1813–1882), sculptor
 - Peter Angermann (born 1945), painter[3]
 - Johann Paul Auer (1636–1687), painter
 - Ernst Aufseeser (1880–1940), painter, illustrator and graphic designer
 - Barthel Beham (1502–1540), engraver, miniaturist, and painter
 - Sebald Beham (1500–1550), painter and printmaker mainly known for his very small engravings
 - Willem van Bemmel (1630–1708), Dutch Golden Age landscape painter
 - Peter von Bemmel (1686–1754), landscape artist
 - Anna Katharina Block (1642–1719), Baroque flower painter
 - Esther Barbara Bloemart (1651–1733), was a German art collector
 - Hans Bolsterer (died 1573), sculptor, carver and medalist
 - Werner Braun (1918–2018), photographer, considered a founder of photojournalism in Israel
 - Cristoforo Coriolano (born 1540), engraver
 - Gabriela Dauerer (born 1958), contemporary artist
 - Hans Decker, sculptor
 - Joachim Deschler (c.1500– 1571), sculptor and medalist.
 - Barbara Regina Dietzsch (1706–1783), painter and engraver known for still lifes
 - Hans Dürer (1490 – c. 1538), German Renaissance painter, illustrator, and engraver
 - Agnes Dürer (1475–1539) wife and model of artist Albrecht Dürer who helped run his workshops
 - Albrecht Dürer (1471–1528), painter, engraver, printmaker, and theorist of the German Renaissance[4]
 - Heinrich Egersdörfer (1853–1915), artist, illustrator and cartoonist
 - Michael Sigismund Frank (1770–1847), Catholic artist, rediscovered glass-painting[5]
 - Magdalena Fürstin (1652–1717), artist and hand-colorist
 - Peter Gertner (c. 1495 – after 1541), painter
 - Dorothea Maria Graff (1678–1743), painter
 - Jonas Haas (1720–1775), engraver
 - Jobst Harrich (1579–1617), painter
 - Guenter Heim (1935–2014), artist known for impressionistic landscapes of western Canada
 - Johanna Helena Herolt (1668–1723), artist
 - Werner Heubeck (1923–2009), British transport executive
 - Augustin Hirschvogel (1503–1553), artist, mathematician, and cartographer
 - Stefan Hirsch (1899–1964), artist.
 - Hans Hoffmann (1530–1591), painter, draftsman, and leading representative of the Dürer Renaissance
 - Karl Jäger (1833–1887), painter
 - Wenzel Jamnitzer (c. 1507–1585), goldsmith and artist
 - Paul Juvenel the Elder (1579–1643), painter
 - Anna Klein (1883–1941), landscape, animal, and genre painter
 - Johann Adam Klein (1792–1875), painter and engraver
 - Rudolf Koch (1876–1934), type designer and a master of lettering, calligraphy, typography and illustration
 - Johann König (1586–1642), painter known for painting copper panels
 - Eliyahu Koren (1907–2001), master typographer, graphic artist, and designer
 - Adam Kraft (c. 1460–1509), stone sculptor, master builder and architect[2]
 - Jobst Kuch (1902–1963), painter
 - Hans von Kulmbach (1480–1522), artist
 - Hanns Lautensack (1524–c. 1560), etcher and draughtsman
 - Heinrich Lautensack (1522–1590), painter and goldsmith
 - Kunz Lochner (1510–1567), armourer, blacksmith, silversmith, and court armourer for Maximilian II
 - Leo Marchutz (1903–1976), painter and lithographer
 - Gustav Metzger (1926–2017), artist and political activist who developed the concept of Auto-Destructive Art and the Art Strike.
 - John Miller (1715–ca. 1792), botanical illustrator, engraver, painter, and botanist[6]
 - Georg Mühlberg (1863–1925), painter, draftsman and illustrator of children's books
 - Amalia Pachelbel (1688–1723), painter and engraver
 - Georg Pencz (c. 1500–1550), engraver, painter, and printmaker
 - Georg Karl Pfahler (1926–2002), painter, printmaker, and sculptor
 - Georg Martin Preisler (fl. 1750), engraver
 - Johann Justin Preissler (1698–1771), painter and draughtsman
 - Valentin Daniel Preisler (1717–1765), engraver
 - Maria Katharina Prestel (1747–1794), engraver and painter
 - Doris Raab (1851–1933), etcher and engraver
 - Johann Leonhard Raab (1825–1899), printmaker and painter
 - William Frederic Ritschel (1864–1949), California impressionist painter
 - Lorenz Ritter (1832–1921), painter and etcher[7]
 - Paulus Roetter (1806–1894), landscape painter who became a prominent botanical and ichthyological artist
 - Ferdinand Rothbart (1823–1899), draftsman, illustrator, history painter, and curator for the Staatliche Graphische Sammlung
 - Philipp Rupprecht (1900–1975), cartoonist of anti-Semitic caricatures
 - Susanne Maria von Sandrart (1658–1716), artist and engraver
 - Eduard Sauer (1899–1975), painter
 - Paul Schad-Rossa (1862–1916), painter and sculptor, in the Symbolist style
 - Hans Leonhard Schäufelein (c. 1480–1540), artist, painter, and designer of woodcuts[8]
 - Erhard Schön (c. 1491–1542), woodcut designer and painter.
 - Martina Schradi (born 1972), cartoonist
 - Carl Max Schultheiss (1885–1961), graphic designer
 - Matthias Schultheiss (born 1946), graphic novel artist
 - Christine Silberhorn (born 1974), physicist and professor at Paderborn University
 - Virgil Solis (1514–1562), draughtsman and printmaker in engraving, etching and woodcut
 - Johann Sperl (1840–1914), painter
 - Hans Springinklee (c.1490– c.1540), artist known for his woodcuts
 - Dora Stock (1760–1832), artist who specialized in portraiture
 - Veit Stoss (c. 1450–1533), Renaissance sculptor, mostly in wood[9]
 - Juergen Teller (born 1964), fine art and fashion photographer
 - Carl Marcus Tuscher (1705-1751), portrait painter, printmaker, architect, and decorator
 - Peter Vischer the Elder (c. 1455–1529), sculptor[10]
 - August Weger (1823–1892), graphic artist, steel engraver and printer.
 - Michael Wening (1645–1718), engraver
 - Michael Wolgemut (1434–1519), painter and printmaker[11]
 - Hermann Zapf (1918–2015), typographer and calligrapher
 - Matthias Zündt (1498–1586), engraver
 - Gustav Philipp Zwinger (1779–1819), painter and etcher
 
Business
- Siegfried Bettmann (1868–1951), bicycle, motorcycle and car manufacturer
 - Theodor von Cramer-Klett (1817–1884) entrepreneur and banker
 - Ronald Grierson (1921–2014), managing director of S.G. Warburg and vice-chairman of General Electric Company
 - Max Grundig (1908–1989), founder of electronics company Grundig AG
 - Werner Heubeck (1923–2009), transport executive, managing director of the Northern Ireland transport companies Ulsterbus and Citybus
 - Adil Kaya ((born 1967), CEO of SIGOS
 - Georg Leykauf (born 1847), steel metalware producer and trader
 - Andy W. Mattes (born 1963), president and chief executive of Diebold
 - Max Michaelis (1852–1932), South African mining magnate
 - Georg Zacharias Platner (1779–1862), manufacturer-entrepreneur
 - Madeleine Schickedanz (1943) heiress and philanthropist known for founding Madeleine Schickedanz KinderKrebs-Stiftung
 - Ulman Stromer (1329–1407), trader and factory owner
 
Cartography
- Martin Behaim (1459–1507), cartographer best known for his Erdapfel, the world's oldest known globe[12]
 - Erhard Etzlaub (c. 1455–1532), cartographer, astronomer, geodesist, and instrument maker
 - Hartmann Schedel (1440–1514), one of the first cartographers to use the printing press, best known for his writing the text for the Nuremberg Chronicle[13]
 
Engineering
- Andreas Albrecht (1586–1628), mathematician, engineer, and inventor of a variety of instruments,
 - David Beringer (1756–1821), scientific instrument maker and craftsman
 - Michael Bümel, maker of scientific and surveying instruments
 - Hans Düringer (died 1477), clockmaker
 - Hermann Föttinger (1877–1945), engineer and inventor
 - Peter Henlein (1485–1542), locksmith and clockmaker who invented the world's first watch
 - Andre Kaup, electrical engineer at the University of Erlangen-Nuremberg
 - Karl Küpfmüller (1897–1977) electrical engineer who worked in communications technology
 - Adolph Friedrich Lindemann (1846–1931), engineer and businessman who was involved in the Transatlantic telegraph cable project
 - Otto Metzger (1885–1961), engineer and inventor
 - Wilhelm Nusselt (1882–1957), engineer
 - Norbert Riedel (1912–1963), engineer
 - Johann Sigmund Schuckert (1846–1895), electrical engineer and pioneer of the electrical industry
 - Robert Thelen (1884–1968), aviation pioneer and designer.
 - Martin Vossiek, engineer at the University of Erlangen-Nuremberg
 
Entertainment
- Tom Beck (born 1978), actor, singer, and entrepreneur
 - Hans Berthel (1914–2003), film art director
 - Heinz Bernard (1923–1994), actor and director and theatre manager[14]
 - Sandra Bullock (born 1964), actress, producer, and philanthropist
 - Annette Carell (1926–1967), actress
 - Christoph Dreher (born 1952), filmmaker, musician and scriptwriter
 - Angela Finger-Erben (born 1980), TV presenter and journalist for RTL Television.
 - Herbert Fleischmann (1925–1984), film and television actor
 - Katy Garretson (born 1963), television director and producer
 - Nina Gnädig (born 1977), actress
 - Ozan Güven (born 1975), film, television, and theatre actor and screenwriter.
 - Margarete Haagen (1889–1966), actress
 - Johann Kaspar Hechtel (1771–1799), designer of parlor games including the prototype for the Petit Lenormand cartomancy deck
 - Thomas Hermanns (born 1963), television presenter, comedian, screenwriter and director
 - Rudy Horn (193 –2018), juggler
 - Şermin Langhoff (born 1969), director of the Maxim Gorki Theater
 - Marcel-André Casasola Merkle (1977), video game designer
 - Friedrich Georg Leonhard Miedke (1803–1842), actor, singer, composer, and theatre director
 - Kurt Neumann (1908–1958), film director
 - Mirjam Novak, television and film actress and screenwriter
 - Wolfgang Preiss (1910–2002), actor
 - Tobias Rosen, Academy Award-nominated film producer
 - Hanns Zischler (born 1947), film actor
 
Law
- Wolfgang Fikentscher (1928– 2015), jurist, legal anthropologist, and professor at University of Münster School of Law, University of Tübingen, and University of California at Berkeley School of Law
 - Jude Pate, justice of the Alaska Supreme Court
 - Gerhard Schricker (1935–2021) legal scholar and professor at Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich
 - Hildegund Sünderhauf, family law professor at the Lutheran University of Applied Sciences Nuremberg
 - Anna Maria Zwanziger (1760–1811), serial killer
 
Literature and journalism

Hans Sachs
- Lilly Becher (1901–1978), writer, journalist, and one of the first anti-Nazi writers
 - Karl Ewald Böhm (1913–1977), writer who served as Director of East Germany's Central Publishing Department
 - Georg Friedrich Daumer (1800–1875), poet and philosopher
 - Gisela Elsner (1937–1992), novelist who won the Prix Formentor
 - Hans Folz (c. 1437–1513), author and poet
 - Helene von Forster (1859–1923), women's rights activist and author
 - Katharina Gerlachin (c. 1517 – 1592), printer and publisher
 - Hans Glaser (c. 1500–1573), printer, block-cutter, woodcut winter, and publisher
 - Claire Goll (1890–1977), writer and journalist
 - Hans Wilhelm Hammerbacher (1903-1980), author
 - Wilfried Happel (born 1965), playwright and author of radio plays and film scripts
 - Bertita Harding (1902–1971), royal German biographer
 - Georg Philipp Harsdörffer (1607–1658), jurist, poet, and translator[15]
 - Karl von Hegel (1813–1901), author and historian
 - Robert Ludwig Kahn (1923–1970), poet
 - Hermann Kesten (1900–1996), novelist and dramatist
 - Anton Koberger (c. 1440–1513), bookseller who established the first printing house in Nuremberg, known as the publisher of the Nuremberg Chronicle[16]
 - Robert Kurz (1943–2012), Marxist philosopher, social critic, journalist, and editor of Exit!
 - Christoph Gottlieb von Murr (1733–1811), historian and journal editor
 - Eugen Ortner (1890–1947), playwright and writer
 - Peter Owen (1927–2016), publisher and founder of Peter Owen Publishers[17]
 - Johannes Petreius (c.1497–1550), printer
 - Johann Rietsch (1778 – 1814), poet
 - Franz Schmidt (1555–1634), diarist
 - Timur Vermes (born 1967), writer
 - Johann Vogel (1589–1663), poet and Lutheran minister
 
Medicine
- Lucie Adelsberger (1895–1971), Jewish physician, imprisoned at Auschwitz and Ravensbrück
 - Karl Bechert (1901–1981), theoretical physicist
 - Joachim Camerarius the Younger (1534–1598), physician, botanist, and zoologist[18]
 - Johanna Hellman (1889–1982), surgeon
 - Ruth Illig (1924–2017), pediatric endocrinologist and a professor of pediatrics at the University of Zurich
 - Friedrich Sigmund Merkel (1845–1919), anatomist and histopathologist
 - Marion Rosen (1914–2012), physiotherapist who developed the Rosen Method
 - Fredric Wertham (1895–1981), psychiatrist
 
Military
- Friedrich Beckh (1908–1942), World War II military aviator
 - Edmund Blaurock (1899–1966), general in the army of Nazi Germany during World War II
 - Gustav Fehn (1892– 1945), German general during World War II
 - Otto Heinrich Fugger, Count of Kirchberg (1592–1644), professional soldier in Imperial and Bavarian service during the Thirty Year's War
 - Hugo Gutmann (1880–1962), German Jewish army officer
 - Georg Haus (1895-1945), general in the Wehrmacht of Nazi Germany during World War II
 - Karl Herzog (1906–1998), German officer in the Wehrmacht during World War II
 - Carl Hilpert (1888-1947), German general during World War II
 - Heinz Kemethmüller (1914–1984), Luftwaffe ace and recipient of the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross during World War II
 - Friedrich Freiherr Kress von Kressenstein (1870–1948), German general who assisted in the direction of the Ottoman Army during World War I
 - Hanns Laengenfelder (1903–1982), German general during World War II
 - Hans Michahelles (1899–1975), German admiral during World War II
 - Egbert Picker (1895–1960), General in the Wehrmacht of Nazi Germany during World War II
 - Friedrich Ritter von Röth (1893–1918), German World War I fighter ace
 - Karl Schnörrer (1919–1979), German military aviator who served in the Luftwaffe during World War II
 - Otto Sponheimer (1886–1961), German General of the Infantry during World War II
 - Heinrich Thoma (1891–1948), German general during World War II
 - Arnold Hans Weiss (1924–2010), U.S. Army intelligence officer who helped find Hitler's will
 
Music
- Pierre Alamire (c. 1470–1536), music copyist, composer, and instrumentalist
 - Chaya Arbel (1921–2007), Israeli classical composer[19]
 - Johannes Bastiaan (1911–2012), violinist
 - Albert Bittner (1900–1980), conductor and Generalmusikdirektor
 - Harald Blüchel (born 1966), electronic artist who is mostly known under his alias Cosmic Baby
 - Karl-Walter Böhm (1938–2000, opera singer
 - Kevin Coyne (1944–2004), musician, singer, composer, film-maker, and writer
 - Hans Deinzer (1934–2020), clarinetist
 - Joerg Deisinger (born 1966), bassist and a founding member of the band Bonfire
 - Jacob Denner (1681 – 1735), woodwind instrument maker
 - Hugo Distler (1908–1942), organist, choral conductor, teacher, and composer
 - Dhurata Dora (born 1992), singer and songwriter
 - Cornelius Heinrich Dretzel (c. 1697–1775), organist and composer
 - Gerald Eckert (born 1960), composer, cellist, and painter
 - Max Erdmannsdörfer (1848–1905), conductor, pianist and composer
 - Christina Gerstberger (born 1976), operatic soprano
 - Sascha Gerstner (born 1977), guitarist and member of the band Helloween
 - Gunther Göbbel (born 1979), singer who took part in Deutschland sucht den Superstar
 - Ernst Gröschel (1918–2000), pianist
 - Johann Wilhelm Haas (1649 – 1723), trumpet maker and engraver
 - Hans Leo Hassler (1564–1612), composer and organist
 - Jakob Hassler (1569–1622), Renaissance composer
 - Kasper Hassler (1562–1618), organist and composer
 - Johann Andreas Herbst (1588–1666), composer and music theorist
 - Sebald Heyden (1499–1561), musicologist, cantor, theologian and hymn-writer
 - Stefan Hippe (born 1966), composer, conductor and accordionist
 - Carl van der Hoeven (1580–1661), composer and organist
 - Hans Hopf (1916–1993), operatic tenor
 - Willy Horváth (1917–2011), violinist
 - Siegfried Jerusalem (born 1940), operatic tenor
 - Johann Erasmus Kindermann (1616–1655), Baroque organist and composer
 - Georg Andreas Kraft (c. 1660–1726), Baroque composer and musician
 - Karl August Krebs (1804 –1880), pianist, composer, conductor and Kapellmeister
 - Walter Kreppel (1923–2003), bass singer known for his opera performances
 - Johann Krieger (1651–1735), composer and organist
 - Johann Philipp Krieger (c. 1649–1725), Baroque composer and organist
 - Rudi Mahall (born 1966), contemporary jazz bass clarinet player
 - Marusha (born 1966), electronic music disc jockey, producer, and television presenter
 - Johannes Menke (born 1972), music theorist and composer.
 - Martha Mödl (1912–2001), Wagner soprano/mezzo-soprano
 - Bernhard Molique (1802–1869), violinist and composer[20]
 - Johann Pachelbel (1653–1706), composer, organist, and teacher[21]
 - Conrad Paumann (c. 1410–1473), organist, lutenist and composer
 - Johann Pfeiffer (1697–1761), violinist, concert master, and composer of the late baroque period
 - Deva Premal (born 1970), singer known for introducing Sanskrit mantras into the mainstream
 - Franz Reizenstein (1911–1968), composer and concert pianist
 - Ulrich Rück (1882–1962), collector of musical instruments and dealer in pianos
 - Hans Sachs (1494–1576), Meistersinger, poet, playwright, and shoemaker[22]
 - Gerlinde Sämann (born 1969), soprano known for her performances in concerts and operas
 - Martin Scherber (1907–1974), composer
 - Ann-Helena Schlüter, pianist, organist, composer, and poet
 - Alexander Schreiner (1901–1987), organist of the Salt Lake Tabernacle who wrote the music to several LDS hymns
 - Johann Staden (1581–1634), Baroque organist and composer
 - Anton Ferdinand Titz (1742–1811), composer, violinist, and viola d'amore player
 - André Watts (1946–2023), pianist
 - Hieronymus Weickmann (1824–1896), viola player and composer
 - Leopold Widhalm (1722–1776), luthier
 - Erwin Wohlfahrt (1932–1968), opera singer
 - Dan Zimmermann (born 1966), drummer in the bands Gamma Ray and Freedom Call
 

Frederick I, Elector of Brandenburg

Markus Söder, 2018

Sigismund, 1433
Politics
- Hieronymus Baumgartner (1498–1565), Bürgermeister and a major contributor to the early Reformation.
 - Günther Beckstein (born 1943), Minister-President of Bavaria, and head of Frederick V's government-in-exile in the Hague
 - Conrad I (c. 1186 – 1261) Burgrave of Nuremberg from the House of Hohenzollern
 - Conrad I of Raabs (died 1143), Burgrave of Nuremberg
 - Conrad II of Raabs (c. 1125–c. 1191), Burgrave of Nuremberg
 - Rudolf Eberhard (1914–1998), member of the Landtag of Bavaria
 - Hieronymus Wilhelm Ebner von Eschenbach
 - Patricia Flor (born 1961), Ambassador of Germany to China
 - Helene von Forster (1859–1923), women's rights activist and author
 - Frederick I (113 –1200), the first Burgrave of Nuremberg from the House of Hohenzollern
 - Frederick III (c. 1220–1297), Burgrave of Nuremberg from the House of Hohenzollern,
 - Frederick IV (1287–1332), Burgrave of Nuremberg
 - Frederick V (c. 1333 –1398), Burgrave of Nuremberg
 - Frederick I, Elector of Brandenburg (1371–1440), the last Burgrave of Nuremberg in 1397–1427[23]
 - Frederick IV, Count of Zollern (c. 1188–c. 1255), Burgrave of Nuremberg
 - Michael Frieser (born 1964), member of the German Bundestag
 - Gottfried II of Raabs (died c. 1137), Burgrave of Nuremberg
 - Gottfried III of Raabs (died c. 1160), Burgrave of Nuremberg
 - Otto Gessler (1875–1955), mayor of Regensburg, mayor of Nuremberg, and German Minister of Defence
 - Hermann Glaser (1928–2018), politically engaged cultural historian and commentator
 - Karl Grönsfelder (1882–1964), Bavarian political activist and politician
 - Nils Gründer (born 1997), politician of the Free Democratic Party and member of the German Bundestag
 - Thomas Händel (born 1953), member of the European Parliament
 - Marian Hastings (1675-1729), Scottish Jacobite supporter
 - Katja Hessel (born 1972), member of the German Bundestag
 - Karl Holz (1895–1945), Nazi Party politician
 - Luc Jochimsen (born 1936), former television journalist and politician of The Left party.
 - John I (c. 1279–1300), Burgrave of Nuremberg
 - John II (c. 1309–1357), Burgrave of Nuremberg
 - John III (c. 1369–1420), Burgrave of Nuremberg and Margrave of Brandenburg-Kulmbach
 - Lisa Kalvelage (1923–2009), anti-war demonstrator during the Vietnam War
 - Martin Kastler (born 1974), Member of the European Parliament
 - Christian Gottfried Lorsch (1773–1830), first civilian first mayor of Nuremberg after it incorporation into the Kingdom of Bavaria
 - Kristine Lütke (bon 1982), Member of the German Bundestag
 - Margaret of Bohemia (1373–1410), Burgravine of Nuremberg
 - Ulrich Maly (born 1960), Mayor of Nuremberg (2002–2020)
 - Donald McEachin (1961–2022), U.S. House of Representatives, Virginia Senate, and Virginia House of Delegates
 - Verena Osgyan (born 1971), member of the Bavarian Landtag
 - Melanie Oßwald (born 1976), member of the German Bundestag
 - Willibald Pirckheimer (1470–1530), Renaissance humanist, imperial counselor, and a member of the City Council of Nuremberg
 - Jan Plobner (born 1992), member of the German Bundestag
 - Heinz Raether (1909–1986), physicist and director of the Institute for Applied Physics at the University of Hamburg
 - Hannelore Roedel (born 1957), member of the German Bundestag
 - Ludwig Scholz (1937–2005), mayor of Nuremberg
 - Martin Sichert (born 1980), member of the German Bundestag
 - Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor (1368–1437), King of Hungary, Croatia, Germany, Bohemia, and Italy; Holy Roman emperor from 1433 until 1437.[24]
 - Markus Söder (born 1967), Minister-President of Bavaria
 - Käte Strobel (1907–1996), Federal Minister of Healthcare (1966–1969) and Federal Minister of Youth, Family and Health (1969–1972)
 - Johannes Wagner (born 1991), member of the German Bundestag
 - Bettina Borrmann Wells (born 1874), suffragette
 - Wenceslaus IV of Bohemia (1361–1419), King of Bohemia and German King[25]
 - Tobias Winkler (born 1978), member of the German Bundestag
 - Giora Yoseftal (1912–1962), Israeli Minister of Labour, Minister of Housing, and Minister of Development
 
- Hans Ziegler (1877–1957), founder of the founder of the Socialist Workers' Party of Germany and mayor of Nuremberg
 - Hans Zimmermann (1906–1984), Nazi Party official
 
Religion
- Johann Wilhelm Baier (1647–1695), theologian in the Lutheran scholastic tradition
 - Christoph Birkmann (1703–1771), theologian and minister
 - Veit Dietrich (1506–1549), Lutheran theologian, writer, and reformer.
 - Eberhard I (died 1164), Archbishop of Salzburg, Austria.
 - Christina Ebner (1277–1356), Dominican nun, writer and mystic
 - August Engelhardt (1875–1919), founder of a sect of sun worshipers in German New Guinea
 - Johann Funck (1518–1566), Lutheran theologian
 - Johann Heß (1490–1547), Lutheran theologian and Protestant reformer
 - Margareta Karthäuserin (mid 15th century), nun and scribe at the Dominican conven
 - Adelheid Langmann (c. 1306–1375), nun known for her text, Revelations
 - Katerina Lemmel (1466–1533), Birgittine nun and patrician businesswoman
 - Georg Major (1502–1574), Lutheran theologian
 - Hans Meiser (1881–1956), Protestant theologian, pastor, and the first Landesbischof of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Bavaria.
 - Gustav Philipp Mörl (1673–1750), theologian and librarian
 - Johann Sigismund Mörl (1710–1791), theologian
 - Maximilian Nagel (1747–1772), theologian
 - Lucas Osiander the Elder (1534–1604), pastor of the Evangelical-Lutheran Church in Württemberg
 - Poppo von Osterna (died 1266), ninth Grandmaster of the Teutonic Order
 - Caritas Pirckheimer (1467–1532), abbess during the Reformation[26]
 - Johannes Pfefferkorn (1469–1523), Catholic theologian and convert from Judaism[27]
 - Gerhard von Rad (1901–1971), Old Testament scholar, Lutheran theologian, and professor at the University of Heidelberg
 - Werner Radspieler (1939–2018), auxiliary bishop of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Bamberg
 - Karl-Josef Rauber (1934–2023), cardinal and prelate of the Catholic Church
 - Moritz Rosenhaupt (1841–1900), Jewish cantor and composer
 - Sebaldus (11th century), the patron saint of Nuremberg
 - Gottlieb Christoph Adolf von Harless (1806–1879), Lutheran theologian[28]
 - Hermann Josef Wehrle (1899–1944), Catholic priest
 

Peter Henlein

Maria Sibylla Merian, 1679
Science
- Michael Adelbulner (1702–1779), physicist, mathematician, physician, and astronomer
 - Karl Bechert (1901–1981), theoretical physicist in atomic physics and politician
 - Ernst von Bibra (1806–1878), scientist, naturalist and author
 - Maria Clara Eimmart (1676–1707), astronomer, engraver and designer
 - Albert Fleischmann (1862–1942), zoologist
 - Alfred Byrd Graf (1901-2001), botanist
 - Ludwig Hopf (1884–1939), theoretical physicist
 - Klaus Kalb (born 1942), lichenologist
 - Maria Sibylla Merian (1647–1717), entomologist, naturalist and scientific illustrator
 - Karl Michahelles (1807–1834), zoologist
 - Franz Wilhelm Neger (1868-1923), botanist, mycologist and dendrologist
 - Johann Leonhard Rost (1688–1727), astronomer
 - Johannes Roth (1815–1858), zoologist
 - Hieronymus Schreiber (died 1547), mathematician and astronomer
 - Meier Schwarz (1926–2022), plant physiologist
 - Ernst Stromer (1871–1952), paleontologist
 - Johann Wilhelm Sturm
 - Suzanne Saueressig (1925–2013), first practicing female veterinarian in Missouri
 - Kaspar Uttenhofer (1588–1621), astronomer
 - Johann Christoph Volkamer (1644–1720), botanist and author
 - Johann Georg Wagler (1800–1832), herpetologist and ornithologist
 - Johann Andreas Wagner (1797– 1861), palaeontologist, zoologist, and archaeologist
 - Bernhard Walther (1430–1504), astronomer[29]
 - Johannes Werner (1468–1522), astronomer, mathematician, geography, and instrument maker
 - Johann Wolf (1765–1824), naturalist and ornithologist
 - Johann Philipp von Wurzelbauer (1651–1725), astronomer
 

Olga Jensch-Jordan, 1931

Maximilian Mueller, 2008
Sports
- Kurt Albert (1954–2010), climber
 - Tobias Dier (born 1976), professional golfer
 - Harry Frei (born 1951), Australian rules footballer and cricketer
 - Alfred Kornprobst (1940–1991), weightlifter who competed at the 1964 Summer Olympics
 - Günther Meier (1941–2020), amateur boxer, bronze medalist at the 1968 Summer Olympics
 - Nicole Roth (born 1995), professional handball player
 - Sebastian Steudtner (born 1985), surfer
 - Tobias Wadenka (born 1990), badminton player
 - Julia Willand (born 1972), beach volleyball player
 - Lisa Zimmermann (born 1996), freestyle skier who won the gold medal in slopestyle at the 2015 World Championships
 
Basketball
- Bastian Doreth (born 1989), professional basketball player
 - Christopher McNaughton (born 1982), professional basketball player
 - Kasha Terry (born 1983), 1983), professional basketball player
 
Chess
- Georg Klaus (1912–1974), chess player
 - Ludwig Rödl (1907–1970), chess master
 
Cycling
- Willi Fuggerer (1941–2015), track cyclist who competed at the 1964 Summer Olympics
 - Matthias Kessler (born 1979), professional road racing cyclist
 - Karl Kittsteiner (1920–2011), racing cyclist who won the German National Road Race in 1946
 - Friedrich von Löffelholz (1955–2017), cyclist who competed at the 1976 Summer Olympics
 - Fritz Neuser (born 1932), cyclist who competed in the tandem sprint at the 1956 Summer Olympics
 - Gerhard Scheller (born 1958), cyclist who competed at the 1984 Summer Olympics
 - Georg Umbenhauer (1912–1970), racing cyclist who won the German National Road Race in 1936
 - Georg Voggenreiter (1912–1986), racing cyclist who won the German National Road Race in 1947
 
Field Hockey
- Hermann End (born 1942), field hockey player who competed at the 1968 Summer Olympics
 - Wolfgang End (1939–2008), field hockey player who competed at the 1960 Summer Olympics
 - Nina Hasselmann (born 1986), field hockey player who competed at the 2012 Summer Olympics
 - Hannah Krüger (born 1988), field hockey player who competed at the 2016 Summer Olympics
 - Maximilian Müller (born 1987), field hockey player, gold medalist at the 2008 and 2012 Summer Olympics
 - Norbert Schuler (born 1938), field hockey player who competed at the 1960 Summer Olympics and the 1968 Summer Olympics
 - Justus Weigand (born 2000), field hockey player
 - Christopher Wesley (born 1987), field hockey player who competed at the 2012 Summer Olympics
 
Football (American)
- Bruce Collie (born 1962), professional player in the National Football League
 - Dominik Eberle (born 1996), National Football League player
 
Gymnastics
- Friedl Iby (1905–1960) gymnast who competed in the 1936 Summer Olympics
 - Elisabeth Ostermeyer (born 1929), gymnast who competed at the 1952 Summer Olympics
 - Hans Pfann (1920–2021), gymnast who competed at the 1952 and 1956 Summer Olympics
 - Irma Walther (1920–2005), gymnast who competed at the 1952 Summer Olympics
 - Lydia Zeitlhofer (1931–2019), gymnast who competed at the 1952 Summer Olympics
 
Martial Arts and Taekwondo
- Jessin Ayari, (born 1992), mixed martial arts fighter and former Superior Fighting Championship Welterweight Champion
 - Rabia Gülec (born 1994), taekwondo athlete who represented Germany at the 2016 Summer Olympics
 - Sümeyye Manz (born 1989), taekwondo practitioner who won the gold medal at the 2008 European Taekwondo Championships and represented Germany at the 2008 Olympics and 2012 Olympics
 - Servet Tazegül (born 1988), taekwondo practitioner who won the bronze medal at the 2008 Summer Olympics
 
Racing
- Hermann Böhm (1916–1983), motorcycle racer.
 - Kevin Hanus (born 1993), professional motorcycle racer
 - Fritz Riess (1922–1991), racing driver
 - Tobias Siegert (born 1991), Grand Prix motorcycle racer
 
Shooting
- Heinrich Gollwitzer (born 1923), sports shooter who competed at the 1960 Summer Olympics
 - Heinz Mertel (born 1936), sport shooter who competed at the 1968, 1972 and 1976 Summer Olympics
 
Skating
- Florian Just (born 1982), pair skater
 - Norbert Schramm (born 1960), figure skater
 - Freimut Stein (1924–1986), figure skater who competed at the 1952 Winter Olympics
 - Markus Tröger (born 1966), speed skater who competed at the 1992 Winter Olympics
 
Soccer (football)
- Deniz Aytekin (born 1978), football referee
 - Willi Billmann (1911–2001), footballer and member of the German national football team
 - Ekin Çelebi (born 2000), professional footballer
 - Marco Christ (born 1980), professional footballer
 - Şamil Çinaz (born 1986), professional.footballer
 - Benjamin Cortus (born 1981), football referee
 - Dominik Eberle (born 1996), football player
 - Karl-Heinz Ferschl (1944–2023), professional footballer
 - Georg Friedel (1913–1987), professional footballer
 - Benjamin Fuchs (born 1983), professional footballer
 - Vanessa Fudalla (born 2001), professional footballer
 - Sebastian Gärtner (born 1993), professional footballer
 - Jann George (born 1992), professional footballer
 - Peter Geyer (born 1952), professional footballer
 - Argiris Giannikis (born 1980), professional football manager
 - Madeleine Giske (born 1987), professional footballer
 - Günther Glomb (1930–2015), football manager and head coach of the Thailand national football team
 - Gottlieb Göller (1935–2004), professional footballer and manager
 - Michael Görlitz (born 1987), professional footballer
 - Isabella Hartig (born 1997), professional footballer
 - Georg Hochgesang (1897–1988), professional footballer and manager
 - Arijon Ibrahimović (born 2005), professional footballer
 - Helmut Jahn (1917–1986), professional footballer
 - Hans Kalb (1899–1945), professional footballer
 - Joannis Karsanidis (born 1993), professional footballer
 - Alexandros Kartalis (born 1995), professional footballer
 - Manfred Kastl (born 1965), professional footballer
 - Georg Köhl (born 1995), professional footballer
 - Michael Krämer (born 1985), footballer
 - Frans Krätzig (born 2003), professional footballer
 - Willi Kund (1908–1967), footballer
 - Nastassja Lein (born 2001), professional footballer
 - Ludwig Leinberger (1903–1943), footballer who was part of Germany's team at the 1928 Summer Olympics
 - Horst Leupold (born 1942), professional footballer
 - Jamie Leweling (born 2001), professional footballer
 - Julian Löschner (born 1996), professional footballer
 - Alberto Méndez (born 1974), professional footballer
 - Max Morlock (1925–1994), professional footballer
 - Andreas Munkert (1908–1982), footballer
 - Marc Oechler (born 1968), professional footballer
 - Richard Oehm (1909–1975), professional footballer
 - Adnan Osmanović (born 1997), professional footballer
 - Chhunly Pagenburg (born 1986), professional footballer
 - Christiane Pape (born 1960), para table tennis player who won seven medals in world championships
 - Peter Perchtold (born 1984), professional footballer and coach
 - Nils Piwernetz (born 2000), professional footballer
 - Fritz Popp (born 1940), professional footballer
 - Luitpold Popp (1893–1968), professional footballer
 - Marco Rapp (born 1991), professional footballer
 - David Raum (born 1998), professional footballer
 - Sercan Sararer (born 1989), professional footballer
 - Josef Schmitt (1908–1980), professional footballer and member of Germany's team at the1928 Summer Olympics
 - Patrick Schönfeld (born 1989), professional footballer
 - Leonhard Seiderer (1895–1940), professional footballer
 - Wolfgang Strobel (1896–1945), professional footballer
 - Heinrich Stuhlfauth (1896–1966), footballer and member of Germany's team at the 1928 Summer Olympics
 - Hans Sutor (1895–1976), professional footballer
 - Sebastian Szikal (born 1986), professional footballer
 - Malik Tillman (born 2002), professional footballer
 - Timothy Tillman (born 1999), professional soccer player
 - Heinrich Träg (1893–1976), professional footballer
 - Frank Türr (born 1970), professional footballer
 - Enrico Valentini (born 1989), professional footballer
 - Daniel Wagner (born 1987), professional footballer
 - Ferdinand Wenauer (1939–1992), professional footballer
 - Marcel Wenig (born 2004), professional footballer
 - Julian Wießmeier (born 1992), professional footballer
 - Tasso Wild (born 1940), professional footballer
 - Mike Windischmann (born 1965), professional footballer
 - Aycan Yanaç (born 1988), professional footballer
 
Ice Hockey
- Gerrit Fauser (born 1989), professional ice hockey player
 - Bernd Herzig (born 1941), ice hockey player who competed at the 1964 Winter Olympics
 - Marius Möchel (born 1991), professional ice hockey player
 - Lukas Reichel (born 2002), professional ice hockey player
 - Niklas Treutle (born 1991), professional ice hockey player
 - Sven Ziegler (born 1994), professional ice hockey player
 
Swimming and diving
- Gerda Daumerlang (1920–2006), diver who competed in the 1936 Summer Olympics
 - Daniela Götz (born 1987), swimmer who won a bronze medal at the 2004 Summer Olympics
 - Suse Heinze (1920–2018), diver who competed in the 1936 Summer Olympics
 - Olga Jensch-Jordan (1913–2000), springboard diver
 - Amina Kajtaz (born 1996), swimmer who competed in the women's 100 metre butterfly at the 2016 Summer Olympics
 - Hermann Lotter (1940–2013), swimmer who competed in the 1960 Summer Olympics and the 1964 Summer Olympics
 - Teresa Rohmann (born 1987), medley swimmer who competed at the 2004 Summer Olympics
 - Hannah Stockbauer (born 1982), swimmer and bronze medalist at the 2004 Summer Olympics
 
Tennis
- Johannes Härteis (born 1996), professional tennis player
 - Robin Kern (born 1993), professional tennis player
 - Maximilian Marterer (born 1995), professional tennis player
 - Hans Nüsslein (1910–1991), tennis player and coach
 - Wiltrud Probst (born 1969), professional tennis player
 - Jurij Rodionov (born 1999), professional tennis player
 - Nicole Vaidišová (born 1989), professional tennis player
 - Nina Zander (born 1990), professional tennis player
 
Track and field
- Inge Bausenwein (1920–2008), competed in the women's javelin throw at the 1952 Summer Olympics
 - Christian Haas (born 1958), sprinter who specialized in the 100 metres
 - Hugo Leistner (1902–2002), hurdler who won the NCAA championship in the 120 yd hurdles in 1925
 
Wrestling
- Absolute Andy (born 1983), professional wrestler
 - Georg Gerstäcker (1889–1949), wrestler who competed at the 1912 Summer Olympics
 - Kurt Leucht (1903 –1974), Greco-Roman wrestler won a gold medal at the 1928 Summer Olympics
 - Tim Schleicher (born 1988), freestyle wrestler who competed at the 2012 Summer Olympics
 - Alex Wright (born 1975), professional wrestler
 
See also
References
- ↑ . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 10 (11th ed.). 1911.
 - 1 2 . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 15 (11th ed.). 1911.
 - ↑ "Biography of Peter Angermann". Biographies.net. Archived from the original on 6 September 2014. Retrieved 12 January 2015.
 - ↑ . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 08 (11th ed.). 1911.
 - ↑  
 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: "Michael_Sigismund_Frank". Catholic Encyclopedia. 1913. - ↑ . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 37. 1894. pp. 412–414.
 - ↑ . New International Encyclopedia. 1905.
 - ↑  
 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: "Hans_Leonhard_Schäufelin". Catholic Encyclopedia. 1913. - ↑ . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 25 (11th ed.). 1911.
 - ↑ . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 28 (11th ed.). 1911.
 - ↑ . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 28 (11th ed.). 1911.
 - ↑ Beazley, Charles Raymond (1911). . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 3 (11th ed.). pp. 653–654.
 - ↑  
 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: "Hartmann_Schedel". Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 13. 1912. - ↑ "OBITUARIES: Heinz Bernard". The Independent. 23 October 2011. Archived from the original on 6 August 2017. Retrieved 12 January 2015.
 - ↑ . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 13 (11th ed.). 1911. pp. 29–30.
 - ↑  
 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: "Anthony_Koberger". Catholic Encyclopedia. 1913. - ↑ "Peter Owen dies – The Bookseller". www.thebookseller.com. Archived from the original on 30 June 2016. Retrieved 17 June 2016.
 - ↑ . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 05 (11th ed.). 1911.
 - ↑ "Chaya Arbel". Jwa.org. Archived from the original on 23 January 2022. Retrieved 12 January 2015.
 - ↑ . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 18 (11th ed.). 1911. p. 668.
 - ↑ . New International Encyclopedia. 1905.
 - ↑ . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 08 (11th ed.). 1911.
 - ↑ . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 11 (11th ed.). 1911. p. 58.
 - ↑ . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 25 (11th ed.). 1911.
 - ↑ . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 28 (11th ed.). 1911.
 - ↑ "Caritas Pirckheimer". Home.infionline.net. Archived from the original on 3 April 2013. Retrieved 12 January 2015.
 - ↑  
 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: "Johannes_Pfefferkorn". Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 11. 1911. - ↑ . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 12 (11th ed.). 1911.
 - ↑ . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 28 (11th ed.). 1911. p. 299.
 
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